Clay

quaternary clay in Estonia

(credit: Wikimedia Commons)

What is it?

Clay is a minimalistic Clojure tool for data visualization and literate programming, compatible with the Kindly convention.

Also see the Babashka Conf 2023 talk.

Status

This project is still alpha-stage and changing. As of October 2023, it is going through extensive refactoring, mostly seeking simpler and leaner implemenation and API. Clay is developed in parallel and in coordination with Claykind, a tool with similar goals which is build in a more thoughtful process, aiming at a more modular structure.

Goals

  • Easily explore & share data visualizations and notebooks for others to easily pick & use.
  • Encourage writing Kindly-compatible notes for future compatiblity with other tools.
  • Flow with the REPL: encourage user interactions that flow naturally with the typical use of Clojure in editors and REPLs.

Setup

See the example project for a concrete example. To enjoy Clay’s dynamic interaction, you also need to inform it about code evaluations. This requires some setup at the your editor.

See the suggested setup for popular editors below. If your favourite editor is not supported yet, let us talk and make it work.

VSCode Calva

(to be updated soon)

Please add the following command to your keybindings.json file at the VScode setup (you may pick another key, of course). This command would evaluate a piece of code and send the result to be visualized in Clay.

{
"key": "ctrl+shift+enter",
"command": "calva.runCustomREPLCommand",
"args": "(scicloj.clay.v2.api/handle-form! (quote $current-form))"
}

Emacs CIDER

(to be updated soon)

Please load clay.el at your Emacs config.

It offers the following functions, that you may wish to create keybindings for:

name function
clay/start start clay if not started yet
clay/show-namespace save clj buffer and render it in the browser view
clay/show-namespace-and-write-html save clj buffer, render it in the browser view, and save the result as html
clay/write-quarto save clj buffer, and generate a Quarto mardkown document
clay/render-quarto save clj buffer, generate a Quarto markdown document, render it as HTML, and show it in the browser view
clay/send send a single clj form to be rendered in the browser view
clay/send-last-sexp send the last s-expression
clay/send-defun-at-point send the defun-at-point

IntelliJ Cursive

Under preferences, search for “REPL Commands” (or use the menu IntelliJ -> Preferences -> Languages and Frameworks -> Clojure -> REPL Commands)

Then add a global command, and edit it with these settings:

Name: Send top-level to Clay
Before Execution: “Do nothing”
Execution: Command (scicloj.clay.v2.api/handle-form! (quote ~top-level-form))
Echo to REPL: Executed form
Execution namespace: Current REPL namespace

It is useful to add 3 commands:

  • (scicloj.clay.v2.api/handle-form! (quote ~top-level-form))
  • (scicloj.clay.v2.api/handle-form! (quote ~form-before-caret))
  • (scicloj.clay.v2.api/show-namespace-and-write-html! "~file-path")

You can then add keybindings under Preferences -> Keymap for the new commands.

See the Cursive documentation on REPL commands and substitutions for more details.

Starting a Clay namespace

Now, we can write a namespace and play with Clay.

(ns index
  (:require [scicloj.clay.v2.api :as clay]
            [scicloj.kindly.v4.api :as kindly]
            [scicloj.kindly.v4.kind :as kind]))
(defonce memoized-slurp
  (memoize slurp))
nil

Let us set up Clay.

(clay/swap-options!
 assoc
 :remote-repo {:git-url "https://github.com/scicloj/clay"
               :branch "main"}
 :quarto {:format {:html {:toc true
                          :theme :spacelab}}
          :highlight-style :solarized
          :code-block-background true
          :embed-resources true
          :execute {:freeze true}})
:ok

These initializations can also be done in a user.clj file, making them available for all namespaces in the project. The browser view should open automatically.

A few useful actions

Showing the whole namespace:

(comment
  (clay/show-doc! "notebooks/index.clj"))

Writing the document:

(comment
  (clay/show-doc-and-write-html!
   "notebooks/index.clj"
   {:toc? true}))

Reopening the Clay view in the browser (in case you closed the browser tab previously opened by clay/start!)

(comment
  (clay/browse!))

These can be conveniently bound to functions and keys at your editor (to b documented soon).

Interaction

Clay responds to user evaluations by displaying the result visually.

(+ 1111 2222)
3333

In Emacs CIDER, after evaluation of a form (or a region), the browser view should show the evaluation result. In VSCode Calva, a similar effect can be achieved using the dedicated command and keybinding defined above.

Kinds

The way things should be visualized is determined by the advice of Kindly. In this namespace we demonstrate Kindly’s default advice. User-defined Kindly advices should work as well. Kindly advises tools (like Clay) about the kind of way a given context should be displayed, by assigning to it a so-called kind. Please refer to the Kindly documentation for details about specifying and using kinds.

Examples

Plain values

By default, when there is no kind information provided by Kindly, values are simply pretty-printed.

(+ 4 5)
9
(str "abcd" "efgh")
"abcdefgh"

Hiccup

Hiccup, a popular Clojure way to represent HTML, can be specified by kind:

(kind/hiccup
 [:ul
  [:li [:p "hi"]]
  [:li [:big [:big [:p {:style ; https://www.htmlcsscolor.com/hex/7F5F3F
                        {:color "#7F5F3F"}}
                    "hello"]]]]])
  • hi

  • {:style {:color “#7F5F3F”}}hello

As we can see, this kind is displayed by converting Hiccup to HTML.

Reagent

(kind/reagent
 ['(fn [numbers]
     [:p {:style {:background "#d4ebe9"}}
      (pr-str (map inc numbers))])
  (vec (range 40))])

From the reagent tutorial:

(kind/reagent
 ['(fn []
     (let [*click-count (reagent.core/atom 0)]
       (fn []
         [:div
          "The atom " [:code "*click-count"] " has value: "
          @*click-count ". "
          [:input {:type "button" :value "Click me!"
                   :on-click #(swap! *click-count inc)}]])))])

d3-require can be used to provide js dependencies:

(kind/reagent
 ['(fn []
     (reagent.core/with-let
       [*result (reagent.core/atom nil)]
       (-> js/d3
           (.require "d3-array")
           (.then (fn [d3-array]
                    (reset! *result
                            (-> d3-array
                                (.range 9)
                                pr-str)))))
       [:pre @*result]))])

Markdown

Markdown text (a vector of strings) can be handled using a kind too.

(kind/md
 "This is [markdown](https://www.markdownguide.org/).")

This is markdown.

(kind/md
 ["
* This is [markdown](https://www.markdownguide.org/).
  * *Isn't it??*"
  "
* Here is **some more** markdown."])
  • This is markdown.
    • Isn’t it??
  • Here is some more markdown.

When rendering through Quarto, LaTeX formulae are supported as well.

(kind/md
 "Let $x=9$. Then $$x+11=20$$")

Let \(x=9\). Then \[x+11=20\]

Images

Java BufferedImage objects are displayed as images.

(import javax.imageio.ImageIO
        java.net.URL)
java.net.URL
(defonce clay-image
  (->  "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2c/Clay-ss-2005.jpg"
       (URL.)
       (ImageIO/read)))
nil
clay-image

Plain data structures

Plain data structures (lists and sequnces, vectors, sets, maps) are pretty printed if there isn’t any value inside which needs to be displayed in special kind of way.

(def people-as-maps
  (->> (range 29)
       (mapv (fn [i]
               {:preferred-language (["clojure" "clojurescript" "babashka"]
                                     (rand-int 3))
                :age (rand-int 100)}))))
(def people-as-vectors
  (->> people-as-maps
       (mapv (juxt :preferred-language :age))))
(take 5 people-as-maps)
({:preferred-language "babashka", :age 36}
 {:preferred-language "clojure", :age 24}
 {:preferred-language "clojurescript", :age 72}
 {:preferred-language "babashka", :age 36}
 {:preferred-language "babashka", :age 1})
(take 5 people-as-vectors)
(["babashka" 36]
 ["clojure" 24]
 ["clojurescript" 72]
 ["babashka" 36]
 ["babashka" 1])
(->> people-as-vectors
     (take 5)
     set)
#{["clojurescript" 72] ["clojure" 24] ["babashka" 36] ["babashka" 1]}

When something inside needs to be displayed in a special kind of way, the data structures are printed in a way that makes that clear.

(def nested-structure-1
  {:vector-of-numbers [2 9 -1]
   :vector-of-different-things ["hi"
                                (kind/hiccup
                                 [:big [:big "hello"]])]
   :map-of-different-things {:markdown (kind/md ["*hi*, **hi**"])
                             :number 9999}
   :hiccup (kind/hiccup
            [:big [:big "bye"]])})
nested-structure-1

{

:vector-of-numbers
[2 9 -1]
:vector-of-different-things

[

"hi"
hello

]

:map-of-different-things

{

:markdown

[:em “hi”], hi

:number
9999

}

:hiccup
bye

}

Pretty printing

The :kind/pprint kind makes sure to simply pretty-print values:

(kind/pprint nested-structure-1)
{:vector-of-numbers [2 9 -1],
 :vector-of-different-things ["hi" [:big [:big "hello"]]],
 :map-of-different-things {:markdown ["*hi*, **hi**"], :number 9999},
 :hiccup [:big [:big "bye"]]}

Datasets

tech.ml.dataset datasets currently use the default printing of the library, Let us create such a dataset using Tablecloth.

(require '[tablecloth.api :as tc])
nil
(-> {:x (range 6)
     :y [:A :B :C :A :B :C]}
    tc/dataset)

_unnamed [6 2]:

:x :y
0 :A
1 :B
2 :C
3 :A
4 :B
5 :C
(-> {:x [1 [2 3] 4]
     :y [:A :B :C]}
    tc/dataset)

_unnamed [3 2]:

:x :y
1 :A
[2 3] :B
4 :C
(-> [{:x 1 :y 2 :z 3}
     {:y 4 :z 5}]
    tc/dataset)

_unnamed [2 3]:

:x :y :z
1 2 3
4 5
(-> people-as-maps
    tc/dataset)

_unnamed [29 2]:

:preferred-language :age
babashka 36
clojure 24
clojurescript 72
babashka 36
babashka 1
clojurescript 20
clojure 29
clojurescript 79
clojure 67
clojure 36
clojurescript 42
babashka 63
babashka 90
babashka 90
clojure 10
clojurescript 7
babashka 33
babashka 64
clojure 14
clojurescript 46
clojurescript 77

Tables

The :kind/table kind can be handy for an interactive table view.

(kind/table
 {:column-names [:preferred-language :age]
  :row-vectors people-as-vectors})
datatables
preferred-language age

babashka

36

clojure

24

clojurescript

72

babashka

36

babashka

1

clojurescript

20

clojure

29

clojurescript

79

clojure

67

clojure

36

clojurescript

47

babashka

91

babashka

94

babashka

93

babashka

36

clojurescript

96

babashka

74

clojure

82

clojurescript

42

babashka

63

babashka

90

babashka

90

clojure

10

clojurescript

7

babashka

33

babashka

64

clojure

14

clojurescript

46

clojurescript

77

(kind/table
 {:column-names [:preferred-language :age]
  :row-maps people-as-maps})
datatables
preferred-language age

babashka

36

clojure

24

clojurescript

72

babashka

36

babashka

1

clojurescript

20

clojure

29

clojurescript

79

clojure

67

clojure

36

clojurescript

47

babashka

91

babashka

94

babashka

93

babashka

36

clojurescript

96

babashka

74

clojure

82

clojurescript

42

babashka

63

babashka

90

babashka

90

clojure

10

clojurescript

7

babashka

33

babashka

64

clojure

14

clojurescript

46

clojurescript

77

(kind/table
 {:column-names [:preferred-language :age]
  :row-maps (take 5 people-as-maps)})
preferred-language age

babashka

36

clojure

24

clojurescript

72

babashka

36

babashka

1

(-> people-as-maps
    tc/dataset
    kind/table)
datatables
preferred-language age

babashka

36

clojure

24

clojurescript

72

babashka

36

babashka

1

clojurescript

20

clojure

29

clojurescript

79

clojure

67

clojure

36

clojurescript

47

babashka

91

babashka

94

babashka

93

babashka

36

clojurescript

96

babashka

74

clojure

82

clojurescript

42

babashka

63

babashka

90

babashka

90

clojure

10

clojurescript

7

babashka

33

babashka

64

clojure

14

clojurescript

46

clojurescript

77

Vega and Vega-Lite

(defn vega-lite-point-plot [data]
  (-> {:data {:values data},
       :mark "point"
       :encoding
       {:size {:field "w" :type "quantitative"}
        :x {:field "x", :type "quantitative"},
        :y {:field "y", :type "quantitative"},
        :fill {:field "z", :type "nominal"}}}
      kind/vega-lite))
(defn random-data [n]
  (->> (repeatedly n #(- (rand) 0.5))
       (reductions +)
       (map-indexed (fn [x y]
                      {:w (rand-int 9)
                       :z (rand-int 9)
                       :x x
                       :y y}))))
(defn random-vega-lite-plot [n]
  (-> n
      random-data
      vega-lite-point-plot))
(random-vega-lite-plot 9)

Cytoscape

(def cytoscape-example
  {:elements {:nodes [{:data {:id "a" :parent "b"} :position {:x 215 :y 85}}
                      {:data {:id "b"}}
                      {:data {:id "c" :parent "b"} :position {:x 300 :y 85}}
                      {:data {:id "d"} :position {:x 215 :y 175}}
                      {:data {:id "e"}}
                      {:data {:id "f" :parent "e"} :position {:x 300 :y 175}}]
              :edges [{:data {:id "ad" :source "a" :target "d"}}
                      {:data {:id "eb" :source "e" :target "b"}}]}
   :style [{:selector "node"
            :css {:content "data(id)"
                  :text-valign "center"
                  :text-halign "center"}}
           {:selector "parent"
            :css {:text-valign "top"
                  :text-halign "center"}}
           {:selector "edge"
            :css {:curve-style "bezier"
                  :target-arrow-shape "triangle"}}]
   :layout {:name "preset"
            :padding 5}})
(kind/cytoscape
 cytoscape-example)
(kind/cytoscape
 [{:style {:width "100px"
           :height "100px"}}
  cytoscape-example])

Plotly

(kind/plotly
 {:data [{:x [0 1 3 2]
          :y [0 6 4 5]
          :z [0 8 9 7]
          :type :scatter3d
          :mode :lines+markers
          :opacity 0.5
          :line {:width 5}
          :marker {:size 4
                   :colorscale :Viridis}}]})

Delays

Clojure Delays are a common way to define computations that do not take place immediately. The computation takes place when dereferencing the value for the first time. Clay makes sure to dererence Delays when passing values for visualization. This is handy for slow example snippets and explorations, that one would typically not like to slow down the evaluation of the whole namespace, but would like to visualize them on demand and also include in them in the final document.

(delay
  (Thread/sleep 500)
  (+ 1 2))
3

Embedded Portal

(kind/portal {:x (range 3)})
(kind/portal
 [(-> [:img {:height 50 :width 50
             :src "https://clojure.org/images/clojure-logo-120b.png"}]
      kind/hiccup)
  (-> [:img {:height 50 :width 50
             :src "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/djblue/portal/fbc54632adc06c6e94a3d059c858419f0063d1cf/resources/splash.svg"}]
      kind/hiccup)])
(kind/portal
 [(kind/hiccup [:big [:big "a plot"]])
  (random-vega-lite-plot 9)])

Nesting kinds in Hiccup (WIP)

(kind/hiccup
 [:div {:style {:background "#f5f3ff"
                :border "solid"}}

  [:hr]
  [:h3 [:code ":kind/md"]]
  (kind/md "*some text* **some more text**")

  [:hr]
  [:h3 [:code ":kind/code"]]
  (kind/code "{:x (1 2 [3 4])}")

  [:hr]
  [:h3 [:code "kind/dataset"]]
  (tc/dataset {:x (range 33)
               :y (map inc (range 33))})

  [:hr]
  [:h3 [:code "kind/table"]]
  (kind/table
   (tc/dataset {:x (range 33)
                :y (map inc (range 33))}))

  [:hr]
  [:h3 [:code "kind/vega"]]
  (random-vega-lite-plot 9)


  [:hr]
  [:h3 [:code "kind/reagent"]]
  (kind/reagent
   ['(fn [numbers]
       [:p {:style {:background "#d4ebe9"}}
        (pr-str (map inc numbers))])
    (vec (range 40))])])

:kind/md

[:em “some text”] some more text


:kind/code

{:x (1 2 [3 4])}

kind/dataset

_unnamed [33 2]:

:x :y
0 1
1 2
2 3
3 4
4 5
5 6
6 7
7 8
8 9
9 10
22 23
23 24
24 25
25 26
26 27
27 28
28 29
29 30
30 31
31 32
32 33

kind/table

datatables
x y

0

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

5

5

6

6

7

7

8

8

9

9

10

10

11

11

12

12

13

13

14

14

15

15

16

16

17

17

18

18

19

19

20

20

21

21

22

22

23

23

24

24

25

25

26

26

27

27

28

28

29

29

30

30

31

31

32

32

33


kind/vega


kind/reagent

Nesting kinds in Tables (WIP)

(kind/table
 {:column-names [:x :y]
  :row-vectors [[(kind/md "*some text* **some more text**")
                 (kind/code "{:x (1 2 [3 4])}")]
                [(tc/dataset {:x (range 3)
                              :y (map inc (range 3))})
                 (random-vega-lite-plot 9)]]})
x y

[:em “some text”] some more text

{:x (1 2 [3 4])}

_unnamed [3 2]:

:x :y
0 1
1 2
2 3

More nesting examples

{:plot (random-vega-lite-plot 9)
 :dataset (tc/dataset {:x (range 3)
                       :y (repeatedly 3 rand)})}

{

:plot
:dataset

_unnamed [3 2]:

:x :y
0 0.26502782
1 0.84590173
2 0.41303214

}

[(random-vega-lite-plot 9)
 (tc/dataset {:x (range 3)
              :y (repeatedly 3 rand)})]

[

_unnamed [3 2]:

:x :y
0 0.24624148
1 0.89984452
2 0.06870097

]

Coming soon

In the past, Clay used to support various data visualization libraries such as ECharts, Leaflet, 3DMol, MathBox, and KaTeX.

These have been disabled in a recent refactoring (Oct. 2023) and will be brought back soon.

source: notebooks/index.clj